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Dell made a laptop that's less about gaming and more about training your own AI
Dell made a laptop that's less about gaming and more about training your own AI

Phone Arena

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Phone Arena

Dell made a laptop that's less about gaming and more about training your own AI

AI has been the buzzword in just about every tech announcement lately – but Dell is taking it to a whole new level with its latest laptop. Unveiled at Dell Technologies World, the new Dell Pro Max Plus workstation is all-in on AI hardware. Instead of just relying on a GPU like most workstations, this one comes packed with a dedicated neural coprocessor built by Qualcomm. It is designed to handle massive AI workloads – like running huge multi-billion-parameter models – right on the device. Unlike the regular Dell Pro Max line, which includes the usual ISV-certified graphics setups and workstation-grade specs, the Pro Max Plus ditches the GPU entirely. In its place? A discrete neural processing unit (NPU), marking it as the first laptop to ship with enterprise-grade AI hardware in this form. It runs on Qualcomm's AI 100 Interface Card, a component usually reserved for cloud servers or data does that mean in real-world use? You can run AI models with up to 109 billion parameters – locally – without ever needing to connect to the cloud. That is powered by 32 AI cores and 64 GB of dedicated LPDDR4x memory, giving developers the firepower they need to build and test things like AI copilots, chatbots, and enterprise tools all on-device, no data sharing, no cloud bills. Dell Pro Max 16-inch. | Image credit – Dell We don't have full specs yet and Dell hasn't revealed the price either, but this is just the first in what will be a full Pro Max Plus lineup. Not all models will be this AI-focused, though. Dell made it clear: this particular one is aimed at AI engineers and data scientists, so yeah – when it launches later this summer, it is probably going to cost way more than the average user would ever consider I mentioned above, Dell says the Pro Max Plus can run a massive 109-billion-parameter model straight from the laptop – no cloud, no servers, no outside connection needed. That is a big leap for mobile workstations. For businesses, this kind of on-device AI processing is huge. It means sensitive data, AI-generated content and even the prompts themselves all stay private and protected. And in today's AI-first world, that kind of data could become some of a company's most valuable is also a real cost advantage here. Running AI models locally means companies don't need to pay for server space or cloud compute time. Plus, it speeds up development – engineers can build and test AI tools on the spot without relying on remote if you are not a developer and don't need that kind of firepower, there are plenty of AI-forward laptops for regular users, too. The new HP OmniBook 5 comes loaded with Microsoft Copilot+ tools and the updated 13-inch Surface Laptop – the lightest in the lineup at just 2.7 pounds – is another solid option that's also built with AI in mind.

Dell unveils new Pro Max AI PC & innovations for data centres
Dell unveils new Pro Max AI PC & innovations for data centres

Techday NZ

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Techday NZ

Dell unveils new Pro Max AI PC & innovations for data centres

Dell has announced the launch of the Dell Pro Max AI PC, which features what the company states is the industry's first enterprise-grade discrete NPU in a mobile form factor. The Dell Pro Max Plus laptop incorporates the Qualcomm AI 100 PC Inference Card, enabling on-device AI inferencing for large models that are typically run in the cloud, such as those with 109 billion parameters. According to Dell, this addition makes the Pro Max Plus the world's first mobile workstation to offer an enterprise-grade discrete NPU. The Qualcomm AI 100 PC Inference Card is equipped with 32 AI-cores and 64 GB of memory. This configuration is designed to support the requirements of AI engineers and data scientists who are working with substantial models for edge inferencing. The device is being positioned as a solution for organisations that seek faster and secure handling of AI workloads directly at the edge. The Pro Max AI PC is now available as part of the Dell AI Factory portfolio. Dell stated that this release is part of a wider suite of infrastructure updates intended to deliver performance for enterprise AI workload development and deployment across client devices, data centres, edge locations, and cloud environments. Alongside the new AI PC, Dell has introduced innovations aimed at improving data centre efficiency. Among these is the Dell PowerCool Enclosed Rear Door Heat Exchanger (eRDHx), which is engineered to capture all IT heat output with a self-contained airflow system, potentially reducing cooling energy costs by up to 60% compared to existing solutions. The technology allows data centres to use warmer water for cooling—between 32 and 36 degrees Celsius—removing reliance on traditional expensive chillers and enabling up to 16% more racks of dense compute capacity to be deployed without requiring additional power. Further enhancements target risk management, offering features such as advanced leak detection, real-time thermal monitoring, and integrated management through Dell's Rack Controller. According to Dell, air cooling capacity can reach up to 80 kW per rack for dense AI and high-performance computing applications. Dell also announced that its PowerEdge XE9785 and XE9785L servers will support AMD Instinct MI350 series GPUs, which deliver 288 GB of HBM3E memory per GPU and claim up to 35 times greater inferencing performance compared to previous systems. The servers will be available with liquid and air cooling options to further reduce facility energy costs related to cooling. The company's storage and data platforms received updates as well. Dell Project Lightning, described by the company as the world's fastest parallel file system based on internal testing, is said to provide double the throughput compared to competing systems, which could accelerate AI training times for large-scale and complex workflows. Enhancements to the Dell Data Lakehouse are designed to simplify AI workflows by enabling the creation and querying of AI-ready datasets for use cases such as recommendation engines, semantic search, and customer intent detection. "We're excited to work with Dell to support our cutting-edge AI initiatives, and we expect Project Lightning to be a critical storage technology for our AI innovations," Dr. Paul Calleja, Director, Cambridge Open Zettascale Lab and Research Computing Services, University of Cambridge, commented. In networking, Dell announced Linear Pluggable Optics, intended to lower power consumption and reduce latency for high-performance computing and AI deployments. The company also introduced AI Security and Resilience Services, which aim to provide end-to-end protection across AI infrastructure, data, applications, and models. Expansion of Dell's AI partner ecosystem was also outlined, connecting organisations with AI solutions from companies including Cohere, Google, Meta, Glean, and Mistral AI. These partnerships facilitate deployment of enterprise search, agent-based AI applications, and on-premises AI models in a secure environment. Dell also revealed joint engineering efforts with AMD and Intel, supporting new hardware stacks such as AMD ROCm and Intel Gaudi 3 AI accelerators for AI infrastructure. "It has been a non-stop year of innovating for enterprises, and we're not slowing down. We have introduced more than 200 updates to the Dell AI Factory since last year. Our latest AI advancements — from groundbreaking AI PCs to cutting-edge data centre solutions — are designed to help organisations of every size to seamlessly adopt AI, drive faster insights, improve efficiency and accelerate their results," Jeff Clarke, Chief Operating Officer at Dell Technologies, said. "We leverage the Dell AI Factory for our oceanic research at Oregon State University to revolutionise and address some of the planet's most critical challenges. Through advanced AI solutions, we're accelerating insights that empower global decision-makers to tackle climate change, safeguard marine ecosystems and drive meaningful progress for humanity," Christopher M. Sullivan, Director of Research and Academic Computing for the College of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University, said. These announcements collectively aim to address industry needs related to data quality, deployment costs, and security, while supporting the transition of AI projects into production environments for organisations worldwide.

Dell's upcoming Pro Max Plus workstation laptops are getting dedicated NPUs.
Dell's upcoming Pro Max Plus workstation laptops are getting dedicated NPUs.

The Verge

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Verge

Dell's upcoming Pro Max Plus workstation laptops are getting dedicated NPUs.

Dell is putting Qualcomm Cloud AI 100 chips into its high-end Pro Max Plus laptops, capable of up to 350 TOPS. That's about nine times more TOPS than a consumer-grade Copilot Plus PC, reserved for professionals who need to run hefty AI models locally. There's no pricing, availability, or full configuration specs yet, but they'll have Intel Arrow Lake CPUs, up to 256GB of RAM, and likely very lofty prices.

Dell stuffed an enterprise-grade NPU into its new Pro Max Plus laptop
Dell stuffed an enterprise-grade NPU into its new Pro Max Plus laptop

Engadget

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Engadget

Dell stuffed an enterprise-grade NPU into its new Pro Max Plus laptop

Dell just announced the new Pro Max Plus laptop, which the company has stuffed with an enterprise-grade NPU. This makes it a top-tier choice for on-device AI applications. The Pro Max Plus features the Qualcomm AI 100 PC Inference Card, making it the "world's first mobile workstation with an enterprise-grade discrete NPU." This NPU offers 32 AI-cores and 64GB of memory. This is enough to directly handle the type of large AI models that typically require the cloud to run. We don't know anything else regarding traditional specs, but we do know that this will be one of many Pro Max Plus designs . The other models won't be quite as focused on advanced AI applications. Dell says this laptop is primarily intended for "AI engineers and data scientists," and so it's held off on announcing pricing. Given the specs, it's likely to be way too expensive for traditional consumers. It's coming out later this year. The company also revealed new server designs and a new cooling system for these servers. Dell's PowerCool Enclosed Rear Door Heat Exchanger (eRDHx) is an alternative to standard rear door heat exchangers. Dell says it captures 100 percent of heat generated via a "self-contained airflow system." It also suggests it can reduce cooling energy costs by up to 60 percent when compared to current alternatives.

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